Infinite Jest Index

In 1996, David Foster Wallace published Infinite Jest. In 2009, hundreds of people across the inter-web were part of Infinite Summer, an open invitation to read DFW’s magnum opus and participate in forums, discussions, and to create their own blogs. Because my many posts on Infinite Jest are now buried deep in this blog, here is a list of all the posts, along with a brief quote.

Why Am I Reading Infinite Jest? “What will I find in Infinite Jest? Will it shine a new light on the dimensions of a life lived at the turn of a millennium and the near-end of the modern world-system?”

Yrstruly and DFW on Race (and Tattoos) “Yrstruly’s vernacular is not a cognitive question, nor an issue of race, but a sophisticated mechanism for private and meaningful communication such as develops in all marginalized caste-cultures.” [Update: as an experiment, I’ve moved this post to a “password protected” site. My blog gets all sorts of hits from folks looking for tatoos of black people” or pictures of certain basketball players, and something about this just strikes me as weird. If you want the password, drop me an email or comment, and I’ll pass it along to you!]

Joelle and Too Much Fun (a 1980s Story) “All day, all night, scrape in the wee hours. No class, smoke straight through. Leave only for burritos, beer, and fresh cartons of cigarettes. The Substance never slackened, never dulled, never misled, refused to abandon us, or us it.”

Orin’s Dread, Part II“Orin seeks to escape himself, his contingency, and his death by fleeing from the sophisticated (because deeply personal and individuated) expectations of tennis and and submerging himself in the purely public adulation of football, with its pre-individuated stadium yowls.”

Three Cheers For DFW! “Eschaton makes clear the difficult relationship between a text and a ‘real’ world, by confusing the Eschaton ‘scenario’ or ‘map’ with the actual territory being traversed by the E.T.A. students.”

On O.N.A.N.ite Politics “I propose that the considerations of O.N.A.N.-ite politics are more absurdist or, to coin a term, bizarrist than they are speculative.”

Holy Schtitt, A Revenant! “When Schtitt called Hal his revenant, a French word for specter or spirit, that which returns to haunt or otherwise horrify the living, we knew that some ghost or other would play a role.”

Schtitt on Two Worlds (vs. Buddhism) “The Schtitt-self is as thematically and philosophically important as the Gately-self. They give different answers. Schtitt offers being, and Gately offers non-being.”

Scorn of Death “There is something quite vicious about the creative demises that have been met, and there is a way in which DFW revels in the telling of them that alternately provokes, disgusts, horrifies, as well as amuses, amazes and fascinates.”

Nothing Left Inside Hal “Anhedonia is a cover for the reality that geuine humanity has a sentimental core. We are shown masks of cynicism, ennui, and jaded irony, and we wear them at that age when we are most susceptible to the fear of loneliness.”

Post-Ironic Sentiment “But since DFW denounced irony – both inside and outside IJ – we are left wondering why he makes use of so many of tools of so-called post-modern, ironic literature.”

Learning From the Technical Interviews “Trying to figure out the sense of this plot is like putting together a used puzzle that comes in a bag instead of the original box with the picture on it. You’re never sure if all the pieces are actually there.”

The Peemster and the Littlest Hoax “The ‘Peemster’ has been responsible for some of the funniest incidents, but alas, he has occasionally become careless, and his final prank is poorly timed with the accidental Tenuation of John Wayne.”

Endings I: Like a Roach Under Glass (or, Orin’s Dread, Concluded) “Orin’s fate reminds us that a post-ironic narrative and world exploration is potentially quite different from the highly personal self-conscious accounts that come from existential literature. The doom associated with the former is less spun out of naked contingency than it is out of a tapestry of interwoven connections.”

Endings II: The Annulation-Text “There are multiple ways in which the characters wend their way into the Year of Glad. There are clues that are more or less present, and more or less consistent.”

Top Posts of Infinite Summer “I collect here all of my favorite Infinite Summer posts from some of my favorite bloggers from the last three months.”

What I’ve been Reading

A finely-crafted science-fiction adventure story about writing a science-fiction adventure story, in which a recently divorced librarian take a cross-Atlantic cruise and sheds her inner good girl, with some help from her best friend "P...

"The future has imploded into the present," writes Charles Cross, quoting Gareth Branwyn's Is there a Cyberpunk Movement?. Cory Doctorow's Makers is another reminder that what looks like the future is already here.

After enjoying Scalzi's The Android's Dream, I went ahead and read this popular space adventure novel. It turned out to suit well my state of mind, which was not terribly mindful at all, given a serious head-cold and sinusitis. The setup...